After all, he reasoned to pitching coach Dewey Robinson, he was about to get a week off.
Rodriguez got his wish, pitching a five-hitter and tying a career high by striking out 11 as the Astros beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-0 on Wednesday.
“I have vacation, so I said, ‘I want to finish the game,’” Rodriguez said, referring to his time off for the All-Star break. “I felt strong, too.”
Rodriguez, 30, threw his second career complete game, having shut out the New York Mets two years ago. He needed a career-high 125 pitches to finish this one, topping the 122 he threw in 2006.
“I thought the fastball had a lot of life today,” Astros manager Cecil Cooper said. “We started out the day today by throwing strike one quite a bit. When Wandy can throw strike one with his fastball, he could be a dominating kind of pitcher. He’s got that kind of stuff.”
Rodriguez (8-6) won his third straight decision and is one victory behind his 2008 total. He’s battled inconsistency in his career but said a game like this helps increase his confidence.
Lance Berkman doubled twice and drove in a pair of runs as the Astros took two out of three games from the Pirates, leaving Pittsburgh without a road series victory since May 18-21.
Charlie Morton (1-2), traded last month in the deal that sent Nate McLouth to Atlanta, struggled in giving up five runs and 10 hits in four innings. In his previous outing, he earned his first win with the Pirates by pitching six scoreless innings.
“It was one of those games where they got to him,” Pirates manager John Russell said. “But I still really like his stuff and he should be fine.”
Rodriguez gave up a pair singles with one out in the second before retiring the next 10 batters. He didn’t allow another hit until Ramon Vazquez singled with two outs in the fifth.
“He threw the ball really well, located his fastball and his breaking ball was really effective,” Russell said. “The difference in speed, it was 91-93 (mph) and his breaking balls were 76-77, which is a big difference. It keeps you off-balance.”
Delwyn Young singled with two outs in the ninth before Rodriguez struck out Garrett Jones to end the game. The crowd of more than 29,000 rose to its feet and cheered loudly.
“When I (saw) that I had nine strikeouts, I said, ‘Hey, I can do two more,’” he said. “So that’s what I did.”
Michael Bourn had a run-scoring triple, Carlos Lee had an RBI double and Miguel Tejada drove in a run for the Astros, who had 13 hits.
Bourn tripled in the third and scored on a single by Tejada to put Houston ahead 1-0. Berkman followed with a double, but Tejada was thrown out at the plate. Lee’s double made it 2-0.
Bourn hit an RBI single in the fourth. Tejada singled to load the bases before Berkman’s double to right field scored Rodriguez and Bourn.





